Table Of ContentFunctional Grammar Series 23
Editors
A. Machtelt Bolkestein
Casper de Groot
J. Lachlan Mackenzie
Mouton de Gruyter
Berlin · New York
Constructing a
Lexicon of English Verbs
I 1999
Constructing a
Lexicon of English Verbs
by
Pamela B. Faber
Ricardo Mairal Uson
W
Mouton de Gruyter
DE
G
Berlin · New York 1999
Mouton de Gruyter (formerly Mouton, The Hague)
is a Division of Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin.
® Printed on acid-free paper which falls within the guidelines of the
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication-Data
Faber, Pamela B., 1950-
Constructing a lexicon of English verbs / by Pamela B.
Faber, Ricardo Mairal Uson.
p. cm. - (Functional grammar series ; 23)
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and indexes.
ISBN 3-11-016416-7 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. English language - Verb. 2. English language - Lexi-
cology) I. Mairal Usön, Ricardo, 1965- II. Title.
III. Series.
PE1271.F3 1999
425-dc21 99-33327
CIP
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - Cataloging-in-Publication-Data
Faber, Pamela B.:
Constructing a lexicon of English verbs / by Pamela B. Faber ;
Ricardo Mairal Uson. - Berlin ; New York : Mouton de
Gruyter, 1999
(Functional grammar series ; 23)
ISBN 3-11-016416-7
© Copyright 1999 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
All rights reserved, including those of translation into foreign languages. No part of this
book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission
in writing from the publisher.
Printing: Werner Hildebrand, Berlin. — Binding: Lüderitz & Bauer-GmbH, Berlin.
Printed in Germany.
To the memory ofLeocadio Martin Mingorance
Preface
by Christopher Butler
In July 1995, the functional linguistics community was shocked and
deeply saddened to hear of the sudden and untimely death of
Professor Leocadio Martin Mingorance, of the University of
Cordoba, Spain. Martin Mingorance's work, combining the
Functional Grammar of Simon Dik with the lexematics of Eugene
Coseriu into the lexically-based Functional Lexematic Model, began
the process of developing the Functional Grammar conception of the
lexicon into a model which integrates semantic, syntactic and
pragmatic aspects of lexemes within a framework in which both
paradigmatic and syntagmatic patterning find their place.
Prominent among Martin Mingorance's collaborators were
Pamela Faber and Ricardo Mairal Uson, whose determination to carry
on and develop the line of research pioneered by their friend and
mentor has resulted in the present volume. Their aim in this book is
impressively ambitious: to give an account of the English verbal
lexicon which not only systematises the meanings of lexemes within a
hierarchical framework, but also demonstrates the principled
connections between meaning and, on the one hand, the syntactic
complementation patterns of verbs, and on the other hand, patterns of
conceptualization in the human mind.
Such an endeavor is entirely compatible with the tendency
towards lexically-based approaches in modem grammatical theory.
This shift in paradigm is explored in the first part of Chapter 1 of the
book, where developments in lexicology and lexicography are
reviewed in relation to their impact on linguistic theorising. Matters of
psychological adequacy and computational implementation are also
discussed.
Chapter 2 provides an overview of Functional Grammar,
concentrating on the role of the lexicon, as a background to the
integrated onomasiological model of lexical description represented by
the Functional Lexematic Model, within which Faber and Mairal's own
proposals are situated.
viii Preface
Chapter 3 provides a more detailed picture of the Functional
Lexematic Model and begins to outline Faber and Mairal's own
proposals. The scene is set by discussion of the often-criticised concept
of 'semantic field' (relabelled as 'domain' in the Functional Lexematic
Model), and its relationship with cognitive and generative linguistics,
and with a number of approaches to lexical semantics. The aim in the
Functional Lexematic Model is to find a kind of onomasiological
organization of the lexicon which will be consonant with what is
known of the organization of the mental lexicon. Faber and Mairal
argue that a hierarchical paradigmatic model comes closest to this goal,
but also that the paradigmatic organization of the lexicon into domains
and subdomains is the basis for predicting the syntagmatic behaviour of
lexemes, insofar as this is represented in syntactic complementation
patterns. Hierarchies are developed through detailed, bottom-up
analysis of entries in a range of monolingual dictionaries, the guiding
principles being those of definitional analysis and lexical
decomposition. Faber and Mairal's aim is to develop hierarchies, and
their associated complementation patterns, for the whole of the verbal
lexicon, in order to achieve a global characterisation of the design of
the English vocabulary. Here, as throughout the book, methods are
explained, and arguments made, through the analysis of an
impressively wide range of semantic domains and their attendant
syntax.
In Chapter 4, the relationships between the semantic and
syntactic behaviour of verbs are explored in much greater depth,
through discussion of three types of lexically-realized parameters
which play a part in the generation of clause structures. Grammatical
parameters are those which have a direct effect on complementation,
and include duration, temporal sequence, iteration, inception,
achievement, cessation, causation, conation and factivity: optional
parameters are those which are semantically present, but not
necessarily syntactically realized; while contextual parameters act as
clues for contextual setting. An important claim is that the greater the
semantic scope of a lexeme, the greater is its variation in
complementation behaviour.
Chapter 5 completes Faber and Mairal's extension of the
Functional Lexematic Model, by providing an account of the
relationship between lexical structure and cognition. A key concept
Preface ix
here is that of the predicate schema, which integrates paradigmatic and
syntagmatic information about an individual lexeme, a lexical
subdomain, or a whole domain. Predicate schemas at the subdomain
level are accorded particular importance in the model, as they represent
the links between the lexical macrostructure and individual lexemes.
The authors demonstrate the power of the predicate schema approach
in explicating the systematic relationships which underlie many
metaphorical extensions of meaning. Chapter 6 concludes the book and
presents an overview of the main claims.
Faber and Mairal's book is most welcome at this stage in the
development of functional linguistics, in presenting a thought-
provoking, challenging and at times controversial account of lexical
patterning and its relationship with meaning, syntax and cognition. It is
sure to give rise to discussion which will take us even further forward
on the road to a functional account of language which responds to the
criteria of pragmatic, psychological and typological adequacy so
strongly advocated by Dik. It also represents a fitting tribute to the
pioneering work of a scholar who was able to take an aspect of Dik's
theory and develop its potential: Leocadio Martin Mingorance.
January 1999